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Monday, February 4

Maid Madeleine, The Merchant & The Medieval Manuscript

Last week, a junior literary
agent left New York to pursue another life. Not really of note, you might say.
But this agent was the rather special Maddie Raffel. Maddie was the assistant
to my agent, Josh Getzler, and had landed a deal in her own right. Maddie had
her own reasons for leaving the world of publishing, as well as issues relating
to the industry. Josh wrote about it on his blog, linking it to a
thought-provoking piece about where the publishing industry is at right now.
You can read the full post here, and I recommend you do.

All of us who have worked
with Maddie wish her well. And as a writer, what do I have to give her except a
tale I found in the medieval archives? (Note: it is unlikely to have been dug
up with Richard III). Here it is.

Maid
Madeleine, The Merchant and The Medieval Manuscript

“Hurry up, Maddie! We’re
going to be late.”

Maid Madeleine quickened her
step at Merchant Getzler’s urge.

Ahead, atop a high mound,
its pale-yellow walls gleaming in the early winter sun, lay the castle. Though
founded as the Castle Isbn, many called it the castle of dreams. For it was
from here that tales, stories, epics, sagas, and misery memoirs came that held
the people of the land in thrall.

Maid Madeleine flushed.
Merchant Getzler had an exacting eye.
Why, he could almost always locate his carriage from whence he had left it the
day before. “Internal narrative, I assure you,” she said.

They set off again. The
throng surrounding the castle was thicker than ever this morning. Hordes of
citizens, waiting. Some clutched older manuscripts, sharing them with their
fellow goodreaders, discussing each one at length. Most just waited, noses
already buried in an unfurled manuscript, half an ear open for an interesting
announcement from the battlements. Some sat in small groups, listening to
storytellers read from their own parchments, handing over coin when the story
pleased them, exclaiming happily at the modest cost and how quickly they had
the story in their hands. But a few, solitary folk stared at the castle, stared
at it with a fierce intensity, knuckles
white as their fists clutched at the front of their cloaks.

“I see the scribes are here
as usual,” she said.

“You know,” said Merchant
Getzler. “They really can blink. They’re not going to miss the call if they
do.” He put a courteous hand to the shoulder of a bearded man who carried a
huge sack. “Excuse me, merchant coming through.”

The man wheeled round.
“Merchant? Merchant, eh?” A bubble of spit flew from his mouth as he smashed
his sack to the ground. “I don’t need any follogagging merchants!” The man
ripped a manuscript from his sack. “Lookee here! I’ve sold 4,000,000 of these.
Meself!”

Merchant Getzler went to leave
on but the man ripped open the roll and began to read.

“I
woke up to the cockerel crowing and I didn’t know where I was and beside me
there was a half nekked body of a woman and I didn’t know who she was and then
I saw she was dead and then I thought there was a murky secret here and then
there was a serial killer who was psychic and then there was a pandemic and I
thought well first I’ll have a shower and then I’ll go to work-”

“Like I said, wow,” said Merchant
Getzler. “And you’ve sold how many, you say?”

Madeleine clutched her stack
of manuscripts as the man hauled his sack back on to his shoulders and pushed
past her.

“Hey!” He shouted to a nearby
group of goodreaders, waving his open copy. “Look at this! Bestseller!”

“Quick, Maddie. While he’s
not looking.”

Madeleine didn’t need
telling twice. She hurried away, her footing unsteady on the melting snow from
last night’s heavy fall.

The rampart led steeply to
the castle gates, the guards making sure that only those who were summoned
could enter.

Madeleine followed the
merchant as the guards waved them through to a wide courtyard. Her pulse
tripped faster as she saw the group of knights in one corner, already deep in
conversation with other merchants. She increased her pace and skidded on the
icy cobbles. Her manuscripts flew from her grasp and landed in a heap of wet
snow.

Merchant Getzler wheeled
round. “Heaven’s sake, Maddie. Get those out of that pile of slush. Now. Before
somebody sees.”

Madeleine hunkered down and
scooped them back up in her hands, cursing silently at her mistake. She’d had
all these prepared and ready as she always did. She handed them to Merchant
Getzler. This was where the tales could be sold, sold for a princely sum.

She crossed the courtyard
with the merchant, both waiting politely as the knights were in deep
discussion. They were all here, as usual.

Sir Hachette, with his
clothes of fine, French silk. Sir Harper de Collins, his surcoat emblazoned
with red flames atop the blue of the ocean’s waves. Sir Simon & Sir
Schuster, for all the world like two men who moved as one. Laird Mac Millan,
the rough woven wool of the Celts high on his red-haired legs though the morn
be chilled.

Snippets of the discussion floated
over to Maid Madeleine and the merchant. “Gentlemen.”
Sir Hachette’s tones were as smooth as his robes. “Of course the manuscripts
can contain vampyres. Vampyres have been around since the dawn of time. It is
only fitting they are in our lore till the crack of doom.”

Sir Hachette drew breath to reply
but a sudden movement from a doorway stopped him.

Silence fell as a large
black-and-white flightless bird wandered out, its path random as it weaved
across the wet stones and disappeared through an arch.

“Poor thing,” came Merchant
Getzler’s whisper in Madeleine's ear. “No-one’s quite sure where it’s going at
the moment.” He took a manuscript from her “Now, I’m going in with this, the
one by the Hibernian scribe. It’s got knights in. Bet they like it.”

Madeleine held her breath as
Merchant Getzler approached the group with a deep bow. They listened carefully
to his impassioned description, then passed it round for a look. A few nods
came as they read, and hope leapt in Madeleine’s chest.

“Does it have vampyres?”
asked Sir Hachette.

“No, my lord,” said Merchant
Getzler.

“What about maidens being
smacked on the bottom?” said Sir Harper de Collins.

The others all nodded
enthusiastically.

“That would,” said Sir
Simon.

“Be great!” said Sir
Schuster.

“Indeed,” said Sir Hachette.
“The goodwives loved that one.”

“Afraid not,” said the
merchant.

A disappointed sigh came
from the group of knights.

“Then we shall all have to
pass. Now please leave us. We have only twenty four phases of the moon to
release another manuscript to the citizens. Castle Isbn never sleeps.”

“Thank you, good sirs,” said
Merchant Getzler. He returned to Madeleine. “No luck this time. Onward!”

They made their way back
down the rampart to where Eileen, the Hibernian scribe, waited as she did every
day.

“Anything?” she asked.

“Not this time,” said Merchant
Getzler. He drew breath to offer his words of comfort, when movement in the
crowd caught his eye.

A young knight who had
recently come to the land stood by a huge cart. A tall, tall woman with a bow
slung across her shoulders was selling manuscripts from the tottering pile on it.

They drew close to the cart.
The tall woman was expert. No sooner had a coin landed in her hand, then she
whipped the right manuscript from the cart and thrust it into the hand of the
waiting customer. “Next!” she cried.

Eileen the Hibernian Scribe
jumped up and down with excitement. “Really? And will I get to be all famous
and have my name and my image on the side of every manuscript saying I lost 14
lbs thanks to This Weird Old Sorcerer’s Trick?”

He shook Eileen the
Hibernian Scribe’s hand, and they lived Happily Ever Single Book Contract.

“I just love happy endings,”
sighed Maid Madeleine.

“Me, too,” said Merchant
Getzler.

Madeleine went on. “But you
know what?” She waved a hand to the castle. “My scribe will have to wait for
all those moonrises until her manuscript can be released.” She chewed on her
lip as she surveyed the rest of the scene. “And I’m not sure that all this is
for me either. I think I want to go back to the lands of the West.”

Merchant Getzler looked
saddened. “That troubles me to hear. But you must be happy in what you do. And
whatever that is, you will succeed and flourish, because you are clever and
talented and young and loved.”

“Thank you for everything.” She smiled. “Who knows, I may be back.” With
a wave, she disappeared into the crowd.

Sir Benedict Palmer returns to Germany on November 1 2016!

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About Me

E.M. Powell’s medieval thrillers THE FIFTH KNIGHT and THE BLOOD OF THE FIFTH KNIGHT have been #1 Amazon bestsellers and a Bild bestseller in Germany. Book #3 in the series, THE LORD OF IRELAND, was published by Thomas & Mercer on April 5 2016. Born and raised in the Republic of Ireland into the family of Michael Collins (the legendary revolutionary and founder of the Irish Free State), she now lives in northwest England with her husband, daughter and a Facebook-friendly dog. She is also a contributing editor to International Thriller Writers The Big Thrill magazine, blogs for English Historical Fiction Authors, reviews fiction & non-fiction for the Historical Novel Society and is part of the HNS Social Media Team. Find out more by visiting www.empowell.com.